[0001] This application claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No.
60/134,827, filed May 19, 1999.
[0002] This invention was made with funds provided by the U.S. Government under National
Science Foundation Grant No. BIR8800278, National Institutes of Health Grant No. P412RR04224-11,
and Department of Energy Grant No. 066898-0003891. The U.S. Government may have certain
rights in this invention.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0003] The present invention relates to a method for determining the sequence of nucleic
acid molecules.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0004] The goal to elucidate the entire human genome has created an interest in technologies
for rapid DNA sequencing, both for small and large scale applications. Important parameters
are sequencing speed, length of sequence that can be read during a single sequencing
run, and amount of nucleic acid template required. These research challenges suggest
aiming to sequence the genetic information of single cells without prior amplification,
and without the prior need to clone the genetic material into sequencing vectors.
Large scale genome projects are currently too expensive to realistically be carried
out for a large number of organisms or patients. Furthermore, as knowledge of the
genetic basis for human diseases increases, there will be an ever-increasing need
for accurate, high-throughput DNA sequencing that is affordable for clinical applications.
Practical methods for determining the base pair sequences of single molecules of nucleic
acids, preferably with high speed and long read lengths, would provide the necessary
measurement capability.
[0005] Two traditional techniques for sequencing DNA are the dideoxy termination method
of Sanger (Sanger et al.,
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A 74: 563-5467 (1977)) and the Maxam-Gilbert chemical degradation method (Maxam and
Gilbert,
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 74: 560-564 (1977)). Both methods deliver four samples with each sample containing
a family of DNA strands in which all strands terminate in the same nucleotide. Ultrathin
slab gel electrophoresis, or more recently capillary array electrophoresis is used
to resolve the different length strands and to determine the nucleotide sequence,
either by differentially tagging the strands of each sample before electrophoresis
to indicate the terminal nucleotide, or by running the samples in different lanes
of the gel or in different capillaries. Both the Sanger and the Maxam-Gilbert methods
are labor- and time-intensive, and require extensive pretreatment of the DNA source.
Attempts have been made to use mass spectroscopy to replace the time-intensive electrophoresis
step. For review of existing sequencing technologies, see Cheng "High-Speed DNA-Sequence
Analysis,"
Prog. Biochem. Biophys. 22: 223-227 (1995).
[0006] Related methods using dyes or fluorescent labels associated with the terminal nucleotide
have been developed, where sequence determination is also made by gel electrophoresis
and automated fluorescent detectors. For example, the Sanger-extension method has
recently been modified for use in an automated microsequencing system which requires
only sub-microliter volumes of reagents and dye-labelled dideoxyribonucleotide triphosphates.
In U.S. Patent No. 5,846,727 to Soper et al., fluorescence detection is performed
on-chip with one single-mode optical fiber carrying the excitation light to the capillary
channel, and a second single-mode optical fiber collecting the fluorescent photons.
Sequence reads are estimated in the range of 400-500 bases which is not a significant
improvement over the amount of sequence information obtained with traditional Sanger
or Maxam-Gilbert methods. Furthermore, the Soper method requires PCR amplification
of template DNA, and purification and gel electrophoresis of the oligonucleotide sequencing
'ladders,' prior to initiation of the separation reaction. These systems all require
significant quantities of target DNA. Even the method described in U.S. Patent No.
5,302,509 to Cheeseman, which does not use gel electrophoresis for sequence determination,
requires at least a million DNA molecules.
[0007] In a recent improvement of a sequencing-by-synthesis methodology originally devised
ten years ago, DNA sequences are being deduced by measuring pyrophosphate release
upon testing DNA/polymerase complexes with each deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate (dNTP)
separately and sequentially. See Ronaghi et al., "A Sequencing Method Based on Real-Time
Pyrophosphate,"
Science 281: 363-365 (1998) and Hyman, "A New Method of Sequencing DNA,"
Anal. Biochem. 174: 423-436 (1988). While using native nucleotides, the method requires synchronization
of polymerases on the DNA strands which greatly restricts sequence read lengths. Only
about 40 nucleotide reads were achieved, and it is not expected that the detection
method can approach single molecule sensitivity due to limited quantum efficiency
of light production by luciferase in the procedure presented by Ronaghi et al., "A
Sequencing Method Based on Real-Time Pyrophosphate,"
Science 281: 363-365 (1998). Furthermore, the overall sequencing speed is limited by the
necessary washing steps, subsequent chemical steps in order to identify pyrophosphate
presence, and by the inherent time required to test each base pair to be sequenced
with all the four bases sequentially. Also, difficulties in accurately determining
homonucleotide stretches in the sequences were recognized.
[0008] Previous attempts for
single molecule sequencing (generally unsuccessful but seminal) have utilized exonucleases to sequentially
release individual fluorescently labelled bases as a second step after DNA polymerase
has formed a complete complementary strand. See Goodwin et al., "Application of Single
Molecule Detection to DNA Sequencing,"
Nucleos. Nucleot. 16: 543-550 (1997). It consists of synthesizing a DNA strand labelled with four different
fluorescent dNTP analogs, subsequent degradation of the labelled strand by the action
of an exonuclease, and detection of the individual released bases in a hydrodynamic
flow detector. However, both polymerase and exonuclease have to show activity on a
highly modified DNA strand, and the generation of a DNA strand substituted with four
different fluorescent dNTP analogs has not yet been achieved. See Dapprich et al.,
"DNA Attachment to Optically Trapped Beads in Microstructures Monitored by Bead Displacement,"
Bioimaging 6: 25-32 (1998). Furthermore, little precise information is known about the relation
between the degree of labeling of DNA and inhibition of exonuclease activity. See
Dörre et al., "Techniques for Single Molecule Sequencing,"
Bioimaging 5: 139-152 (1997).
[0009] In a second approach utilizing exonucleases,
native DNA is digested while it is being pulled through a thin liquid film in order to spatially
separate the cleaved nucleotides. See Dapprich et al., "DNA Attachment to Optically
Trapped Beads in Microstructures Monitored by Bead Displacement,"
Bioimaging 6: 25-32 (1998). They then diffuse a short distance before becoming immobilized on
a surface for detection. However, most exonucleases exhibit sequence- and structure-dependent
cleavage rates, resulting in difficulties in data analysis and matching sets from
partial sequences. In addition, ways to identify the bases on the detection surface
still have to be developed or improved.
[0010] Regardless of the detection system, methods which utilize exonucleases have not been
developed into methods that meet today's demand for rapid, high-throughput sequencing.
In addition, most exonucleases have relatively slow turnover rates, and the proposed
methods require extensive pretreatment, labeling and subsequent immobilization of
the template DNA on the bead in the flowing stream of fluid, all of which make a realization
into a simple high-throughput system more complicated.
[0011] Other, more direct approaches to DNA sequencing have been attempted, such as determining
the
spatial sequence of fixed and stretched DNA molecules by scanned atomic probe microscopy.
Problems encountered with using these methods consist in the narrow spacing of the
bases in the DNA molecule (only 0.34 nm) and their small physicochemical differences
to be recognized by these methods. See Hansma et al., "Reproducible Imaging and Dissection
of Plasmid DNA Under Liquid with the Atomic Force Microscope,"
Science 256: 1180-1184 (1992).
[0012] In a recent approach for microsequencing using polymerase, but not exonuclease, a
set of identical single stranded DNA (ssDNA) molecules are linked to a substrate and
the sequence is determined by repeating a series of reactions using fluorescently
labelled dNTPs. U.S. Patent No. 5,302,509 to Cheeseman. However, this method requires
that each base is added with a fluorescent label and 3'-dNTP blocking groups. After
the base is added and detected, the fluorescent label and the blocking group are removed,
and, then, the next base is added to the polymer.
[0013] Thus, the current sequencing methods either require both polymerase and exonuclease
activity to deduce the sequence or rely on polymerase alone with additional steps
of adding and removing 3'-blocked dNTPs. The human genome project has intensified
the demand for rapid, small- and large-scale DNA sequencing that will allow high throughput
with minimal starting material. There also remains a need to provide a method for
sequencing nucleic acid molecules that requires only polymerase activity, without
the use of blocking substituents, resulting in greater simplicity, easier miniaturizability,
and compatibility to parallel processing of a single-step technique.
[0014] The present invention is directed to meeting the needs and overcoming deficiencies
in the art.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0015] The present invention relates to a method of sequencing a target nucleic acid molecule
having a plurality of nucleotide bases. This method involves providing a complex of
a nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme and the target nucleic acid molecule oriented with
respect to each other in a position suitable to add a nucleotide analog at an active
site complementary to the target nucleic acid. A plurality of types of nucleotide
analogs are provided proximate to the active site, wherein each type of nucleotide
analog is complementary to a different nucleotide in the target nucleic acid sequence.
A nucleotide analog is polymerized at an active site, wherein the nucleotide analog
being added is complementary to the nucleotide of the target nucleic acid, leaving
the added nucleotide analog ready for subsequent addition of nucleotide analogs. The
nucleotide analog added at the active site as a result of the polymerizing step is
identified. The steps of providing a plurality of nucleotide analogs, polymerizing,
and identifying are repeated so that the sequence of the target nucleic acid is determined.
[0016] Another aspect of the present invention relates to an apparatus suitable for sequencing
a target nucleic acid molecule. This apparatus includes a support as well as a nucleic
acid polymerizing enzyme or oligonucleotide primer suitable to bind to a target nucleic
acid molecule, where the polymerase or oligonucleotide primer is positioned on the
support. A microstructure defines a confined region containing the support and the
nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme or the oligonucleotide primer which is configured
to permit labeled nucleotide analogs that are not positioned on the support to move
rapidly through the confined region.
[0017] A further feature of the present invention involves an apparatus suitable for sequencing
a target nucleic acid molecule. This apparatus includes a solid support and a nucleic
acid polymerizing enzyme or oligonucleotide primer suitable to hybridize to a target
nucleic acid molecule, where the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme or oligonucleotide
primer is positioned on the support. A housing defines a confined region containing
the support and the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme or the oligonucleotide primer.
The housing is constructed to facilitate identification of labeled nucleotide analogs
positioned on the support. Optical waveguides proximate to the confined region focus
activating radiation on the confined region and collect radiation from the confined
region.
[0018] Numerous advantages are achieved with the present invention. Sequencing can be carried
out with small amounts of nucleic acid, with the capability of sequencing single nucleic
acid template molecules which eliminates the need for amplification prior to initiation
of sequencing. Long read lengths of sequence can be deduced in one run, eliminating
the need for extensive computational methods to assemble a gap-free full length sequence
of long template molecules (e.g., bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones). For
two operational modes of the present inventions, the read length of the sequence is
limited by the length of template to be sequenced, or the processivity of the polymerase,
respectively. By using the appropriate enzymatic systems, e.g. with accessory proteins
to initiate the sequencing reaction at specific sites (e.g., origins of replication)
on the double-stranded template nucleic acid, preparative steps necessary for conventional
sequencing techniques, such as subcloning into sequencing vectors, can be eliminated.
[0019] In addition, the sequencing method of the present invention can be carried out using
polymerase and no exonuclease. This results in greater simplicity, easier miniaturizability,
and compatibility to parallel processing of a single-step technique.
[0020] In regard to the latter advantage, some polymerases exhibit higher processivity and
catalytic speeds than exonucleases, with over 10,000 bases being added before dissociation
of the enzyme for the case of T7 DNA polymerase (compared to 3,000 bases for λ exonuclease).
In some cases, e.g., T7 DNA polymerase complexed with T7 helicase/primase, processivity
values are even higher, ranging into several 100,000s. The rates of DNA synthesis
can be very high, measured
in vivo of 1,000 bases/sec and
in vitro of 750 bases/sec (in contrast to 12 bases/sec degraded by λ exonuclease
in vitro). See Kelman et al., "Processivity of DNA Polymerases: Two Mechanisms, One Goal,"
Structure 6: 121-125 (1998); Carter et al., "The Role of Exonuclease and Beta Protein of Phage
Lambda in Genetic Recombination. II. Substrate Specificity and the Mode of Action
of Lambda Exonuclease,"
J. Biol. Chem. 246: 2502-2512 (1971); Tabor et al., "Escherichia coli Thioredoxin Confers Processivity
on the DNA Polymerase Activity of the Gene 5 Protein of Bacteriophage T7,"
J. Biol. Chem. 262: 16212-16223 (1987); and Kovall et al., "Toroidal Structure of Lambda-Exonuclease"
Science 277: 1824-1827 (1997), which are hereby incorporated by reference. An incorporation
rate of 750 bases/sec is approximately 150 times faster than the sequencing speed
of one of the fully automated ABI PRISM 3700 DNA sequencers by Perkin Elmer Corp.,
Foster City, Califomia, proposed to be utilized in a shot-gun sequencing strategy
for the human genome. See Venter et al., "Shotgun Sequencing of the Human Genome,"
Science 280: 1540-1542 (1998), which is hereby incorporated by reference.
[0021] The small size of the apparatus that can be used to carry out the sequencing method
of the present invention is also highly advantageous. The confined region of the template/polymerase
complex can be provided by the microstructure apparatus with the possibility of arrays
enabling a highly parallel operational mode, with thousands of sequencing reactions
carried out sequentially or simultaneously. This provides a fast and ultrasensitive
tool for research application as well as in medical diagnostics.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0022]
Figures 1A-C show 3 alternative embodiments for sequencing in accordance with the
present invention.
Figures 2A-C are schematic drawings showing the succession of steps used to sequence
nucleic acids in accordance with the present invention.
Figures 3A-C show plots of fluorescence signals vs. time during the succession of
steps used to sequence the nucleic acid in accordance with the present invention.
Figure 3C shows the sequence generated by these steps.
Figures 4A-D depict the structure and schematic drawings showing the succession of
steps used to sequence the nucleic acid in accordance with the present invention in
the case where fluorescent nucleotides carrying the label at the gamma phosphate position
(here shown as a gamma-linked dNTP) are used.
Figure 5 shows the principle of discrimination of fluorophores by time-gated fluorescence
decay time measurements, which can be used to suppress background signal in accordance
with the present invention.
Figure 6A shows a system for sequencing in accordance with the present invention.
Figure 6B is an enlargement of a portion of that system.
Figure 7A shows a system for sequencing in accordance with the present invention using
electromagnetic field enhancement with metal tips. Figure 7B is an enlargement of
a portion of that system.
Figure 8A shows a system for sequencing in accordance with the present invention using
near field apertures. Figure 8B is an enlargement of a portion of that system.
Figure 9A shows a system for sequencing in accordance with the present invention using
nanochannels. Figure 9B is an enlargement of a portion of that system.
Figures 10A-B show systems for supplying reagents to a nanofabricated confinement
system in accordance with the present invention. In particular, Figure 10A is a schematic
drawing which shows how reagents are provided and passed through the system. Figure
10B is similar but shows this system on a single chip with pads to connect the system
to fluid reservoirs.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0023] The present invention relates to a method of sequencing a target nucleic acid molecule
having a plurality of nucleotide bases. This method involves providing a complex of
a nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme and the target nucleic acid molecule oriented with
respect to each other in a position suitable to add a nucleotide analog at an active
site complementary to the target nucleic acid. A plurality of types of nucleotide
analogs are provided proximate to the active site, wherein each type of nucleotide
analog is complementary to a different nucleotide in the target nucleic acid sequence.
A nucleotide analog is polymerized at an active site, wherein the nucleotide analog
being added is complementary to the nucleotide of the target nucleic acid, leaving
the added nucleotide analog ready for subsequent addition of nucleotide analogs. The
nucleotide analog added at the active site as a result of the polymerizing step is
identified. The steps of providing a plurality of nucleotide analogs, polymerizing,
and identifying are repeated so that the sequence of the target nucleic acid is determined.
[0024] Another aspect of the present invention relates to an apparatus suitable for sequencing
a target nucleic acid molecule. This apparatus includes a support as well as a nucleic
acid polymerizing enzyme or oligonucleotide primer suitable to bind to a target nucleic
acid molecule, where the polymerase or oligonucleotide primer is positioned on the
support. A microstructure defines a confined region containing the support and the
nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme or the oligonucleotide primer which is configured
to permit labeled nucleotide analogs that are not positioned on the support to move
rapidly through the confined region.
[0025] A further feature of the present invention involves an apparatus suitable for sequencing
a target nucleic acid molecule. This apparatus includes a support and a nucleic acid
polymerizing enzyme or oligonucleotide primer suitable to hybridize to a target nucleic
acid molecule, where the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme or oligonucleotide primer
is positioned on the support. A housing defines a confined region containing the support
and the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme or the oligonucleotide primer. The housing
is constructed to facilitate identification of labeled nucleotide analogs positioned
on the support. Optical waveguides proximate to the confined region focus activating
radiation on the confined region and collect radiation from the confined region.
[0026] The present invention is directed to a method of sequencing a target nucleic acid
molecule having a plurality of bases. In its fundamental principle, the
temporal order of base additions during the polymerization reaction is measured on a single
molecule of nucleic acid, i.e. the activity of a nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme,
hereafter also referred to as polymerase, on the template nucleic acid molecule to
be sequenced is followed in real time. The sequence is deduced by identifying which
base is being incorporated into the growing complementary strand of the target nucleic
acid by the catalytic activity of the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme at each step
in the sequence of base additions. In the preferred embodiment of the invention, recognition
of the time sequence of base additions is achieved by detecting fluorescence from
appropriately labelled nucleotide analogs as they are incorporated into the growing
nucleic acid strand. Accuracy of base pairing is provided by the specificity of the
enzyme, with error rates of false base pairing of 10
-5 or less. For enzyme fidelity, see Johnson, "Conformational Coupling in DNA-Polymerase
Fidelity,"
Ann. Rev. Biochem. 62:685-713 (1993) and Kunkel, "DNA-Replication Fidelity,"
J. Biol. Chem. 267:18251-18254 (1992), which are hereby incorporated by reference.
[0027] The invention applies equally to sequencing all types of nucleic acids (DNA, RNA,
DNA/RNA hybrids etc.) using a number of polymerizing enzymes (DNA polymerases, RNA
polymerases, reverse transcriptases, mixtures, etc.). Therefore, appropriate nucleotide
analogs serving as substrate molecules for the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme can
consist of members of the groups of dNTPs, NTPs, modified dNTPs or NTPs, peptide nucleotides,
modified peptide nucleotides, or modified phosphate-sugar backbone nucleotides.
[0028] There are two convenient operational modes in accordance with the present invention.
In the first operational mode of the invention, the template nucleic acid is attached
to a support. This can be either by immobilization of (1) an oligonucleotide primer
or (2) a single-stranded or (3) double-stranded target nucleic acid molecule. Then,
either (1) the target nucleic acid molecule is hybridized to the attached oligonucleotide
primer, (2) an oligonucleotide primer is hybridized to the immobilized target nucleic
acid molecule, to form a primed target nucleic acid molecule complex, or (3) a recognition
site for the polymerase is created on the double stranded template (e.g., through
interaction with accessory proteins, such as a primase). A nucleic acid polymerizing
enzyme on the primed target nucleic acid molecule complex is provided in a position
suitable to move along the target nucleic acid molecule and extend the oligonucleotide
primer at an active site. A plurality of labelled types of nucleotide analogs, which
do not have a blocking substituent, are provided proximate to the active site, with
each distinguishable type of nucleotide analog being complementary to a different
nucleotide in the target nucleic acid sequence. The oligonucleotide primer is extended
by using the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme to add a nucleotide analog to the oligonucleotide
primer at the active site, where the nucleotide analog being added is complementary
to the nucleotide of the target nucleic acid at the active site. The nucleotide analog
added to the oligonucleotide primer as a result of the extending step is identified.
If necessary, the labeled nucleotide analog, which is added to the oligonucleotide
primer, is treated before many further nucleotide analogs are incorporated into the
oligonucleotide primer to insure that the nucleotide analog added to the oligonucleotide
primer does not prevent detection of nucleotide analogs in subsequent polymerization
and identifying steps. The steps of providing labelled nucleotide analogs, extending
the oligonucleotide primer, identifying the added nucleotide analog, and treating
the nucleotide analog are repeated so that the oligonucleotide primer is further extended
and the sequence of the target nucleic acid is determined.
[0029] Alternatively, the above-described procedure can be carried out by first attaching
the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme to a support in a position suitable for the target
nucleic acid molecule complex to move relative to the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
so that the primed nucleic acid molecular complex is extended at an active site. In
this embodiment, a plurality of labelled nucleotide analogs complementary to the nucleotide
of the target nucleic acid at the active site are added as the primed target nucleic
acid complex moves along the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme. The steps of providing
nucleotide analogs, extending the primer, identifying the added nucleotide analog,
and treating the nucleotide analog during or after incorporation are repeated, as
described above, so that the oligonucleotide primer is further extended and the sequence
of the target nucleic acid is determined.
[0030] Figures 1A-C show 3 alternative embodiments for sequencing in accordance with the
present invention. In Figure 1A, a sequencing primer is attached to a support, e.g.
by a biotin-streptavidin bond, with the primer hybridized to the target nucleic acid
molecule and the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme attached to the hybridized nucleic
acid molecule at the active site where nucleotide analogs are being added to the sequencing
primer. In Figure 1B, the target nucleic acid molecule is attached to a support, with
a sequencing primer hybridized to the template nucleic acid molecule and the nucleic
acid polymerizing enzyme attached to the hybridized nucleic molecule at the active
site where nucleotide analogs are being added to the sequencing primer. The primer
can be added before or during the providing of nucleotide analogs. In addition to
these scenarios, a double stranded target nucleic acid molecule can be attached to
a support, with the target nucleic acid molecule harboring a recognition site for
binding of the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme at an active site where nucleotide
analogs are being added to the primer. For example, such a recognition site can be
established with the help of an accessory protein, such as an RNA polymerase or a
helicase/primase, which will synthesize a short primer at specific sites on the target
nucleic acid and thus provide a starting site for the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme.
See Richardson "Bacteriophage T7: Minimal Requirements for the Replication of a Duplex
DNA Molecule,"
Cell 33: 315-317 (1983), which is hereby incorporated by reference. In Figure 1C, the
nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme is attached to a support, with the primed target
nucleic acid molecule binding at the active site where nucleotide analogs are being
added to the sequencing primer. As in the previous description, the nucleic acid polymerizing
enzyme can likewise be attached to a support, but with the target nucleic acid molecule
being double-stranded nucleic acid, harboring a recognition site for binding of the
nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme at an active site where nucleotide analogs are being
added to the growing nucleic acid strand. Although Figures 1A-C show only one sequencing
reaction being carried out on the support, it is possible to conduct an array of several
such reactions at different sites on a single support. In this alternative embodiment,
each sequencing primer, target nucleic acid, or nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme to
be immobilized on this solid support is spotted on that surface by microcontact printing
or stamping, e.g., as is used for microarray technology of DNA chips, or by forming
an array of binding sites by treating the surface of the solid support. It is also
conceivable to combine the embodiments outlined in Figure 1 and immobilize both the
target nucleic acid molecule and the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme proximate to
each other.
[0031] The sequencing process of the present invention can be used to determine the sequence
of any nucleic acid molecule, including double-stranded or single-stranded DNA, single
stranded DNA hairpins, DNA/RNA hybrids, RNA with a recognition site for binding of
the polymerase, or RNA hairpins.
[0032] The sequencing primer used in carrying out the process of the present invention can
be a ribonucleotide, deoxyribonucleotide, modified ribonucleotide, modified deoxyribonucleotide,
peptide nucleic acid, modified peptide nucleic acid, modified phosphate-sugar backbone
oligonucleotide, and other nucleotide and oligonucleotide analogs. It can be either
synthetic or produced naturally by primases, RNA polymerases, or other oligonucleotide
synthesizing enzymes.
[0033] The nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme utilized in accordance with the present invention
can be either a thermostable polymerase or a thermally degradable polymerase. Examples
for suitable thermostable polymerases include polymerases isolated from
Thermus aquaticus, Thermus thermophilus, Pyrococcus woesei, Pyrococcus furiosus, Thermococcus
litoralis, and
Thermotoga maritima. Useful thermodegradable polymersases include E.
coli DNA polymerase, the Klenow fragment of
E. coli DNA polymerase, T4 DNA polymerase, T7 DNA polymerase, and others. Examples for other
polymerizing enzymes that can be used to determine the sequence of nucleic acid molecules
include E.
coli, T7, T3, SP6 RNA polymerases and AMV, M-MLV and HIV reverse transcriptases. The polymerase
can be bound to the primed target nucleic acid sequence at a primed single-stranded
nucleic acid, an origin of replication, a nick or gap in a double-stranded nucleic
acid, a secondary structure in a single-stranded nucleic acid, a binding site created
by an accessory protein, or a primed single-stranded nucleic acid.
[0034] Materials which are useful in forming the support include glass, glass with surface
modifications, silicon, metals, semiconductors, high refractive index dielectrics,
crystals, gels, and polymers.
[0035] In the embodiments of Figures 1, any suitable binding partner known to those skilled
in the art could be used to immobilize either the sequencing primer, the target nucleic
acid molecule, or the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme to the support. Non-specific
binding by adsorption is also possible. As shown in Figures 1A-C, a biotin-streptavidin
linkage is suitable for binding the sequencing primer or the target nucleic acid molecule
to the solid support. The biotin component of such a linkage can be attached to either
the primer or nucleic acid or to the solid support with the streptavidin (or any other
biotin-binding protein) being attached to the opposite entity.
[0036] One approach for carrying out this binding technique involves attaching PHOTOACTIVATABLE
BIOTIN™ ("PAB") (Pierce Chemical Co., Rockford, Illinois) to a surface of the chamber
used to carry out the sequencing procedure of the present invention. This can be achieved
by exposure to light at 360 nm, preferably through a transparent wall of the chamber,
as described in Hengsakul et al., "Protein Patterning with a Photoactivable Derivative
of Biotin,"
Bioconjugate Chem. 7: 249-54 (1996), which is hereby incorporated by reference. When using a nanochamber,
the biotin is activated in a diffraction-limited spot under an optical microscope.
With near-field excitation, exposure can be self-aligned using a waveguide to direct
light to the desired area. When exposed to light the PAB is activated and binds covalently
to the interior surface of the channel. Excess unbound PAB is then removed by flushing
with water.
[0037] Alternatively, streptavidin can be coated on the support surface. The appropriate
nucleic acid primer oligonucleotide or the single stranded nucleic acid template is
then biotinylated, creating an immobilized nucleic acid primer-target molecule complex
by virtue of the streptavidin-biotin bound primer.
[0038] Another approach for carrying out the process of the present invention is to utilize
complementary nucleic acids to link the sequencing primer or the target nucleic acid
molecule to the solid support. This can be carried out by modifying a single stranded
nucleic acid with a known leader sequence and ligating the known leader sequence to
the sequencing primer or the target nucleic acid molecule. The resulting oligonucleotide
may then be bound by hybridization to an oligonucleotide attached to the support and
having a nucleotide sequence complementary to that of the known leader sequence. Alternatively,
a second oligonucleotide can be hybridized to an end of the target nucleic acid molecule
opposite to that bound to the oligonucleotide primer. That second oligonucleotide
is available for hybridization to a complementary nucleic sequence attached to the
support.
[0039] Reversible or irreversible binding between the support and either the oligonucleotide
primer or the target nucleic acid sequence can be achieved with the components of
any covalent or non-covalent binding pair. Other such approaches for immobilizing
the sequencing primer or the target nucleic acid molecule to the support include an
antibody-antigen binding pair and photoactivated coupling molecules.
[0040] In the embodiment of Figure 1C, any technique known to be useful in reversibly or
irreversibly immobilizing proteinaceous materials can be employed. It has been reported
in the literature that RNA polymerase was successfully immobilized on activated surfaces
without loss of catalytic activity. See Yin et al., "Transcription Against an Applied
Force,"
Science 270:1653-1657 (1995), which is hereby incorporated by reference. Alternatively, the
protein can be bound to an antibody, which does not interfere with its catalytic activity,
as has been reported for HIV reverse transcriptase. See Lennerstrand et al., "A Method
for Combined Immunoaffinity Purification and Assay of HIV-1 Reverse Transcriptase
Activity Useful for Crude Samples,"
Anal. Biochem. 235:141-152 (1996), which is hereby incorporated by reference. Therefore, nucleic
acid polymerizing enzymes can be immobilized without loss of function. The antibodies
and other proteins can be patterned on inorganic surfaces. See James et al., "Patterned
Protein Layers on Solid Substrates by Thin Stamp Microcontact Printing,"
Langmuir 14:741-744 (1998) and St John et al., "Diffraction-Based Cell Detection Using a Microcontact
Printed Antibody Grating,"
Anal. Chem. 70:1108-1111 (1998), which are hereby incorporated by reference. Alternatively, the
protein could be biotinylated (or labelled similarly with other binding molecules),
and then bound to a streptavidin-coated support surface.
[0041] In any of the embodiments of Figures 1A to C, the binding partner and either the
polymerase or nucleic acids they immobilize can be applied to the support by conventional
chemical and photolithographic techniques which are well known in the art. Generally,
these procedures can involve standard chemical surface modifications of the support,
incubation of the support at different temperatures in different media, and possible
subsequent steps of washing and incubation of the support surface with the respective
molecules.
[0042] Alternative possibilities of positioning of the polymerizing complex are conceivable,
such as by entrapment of the complex in a gel harboring pores too small to allow passage
of the complex, but large enough to accommodate delivery of nucleotide analogs. Suitable
media include agarose gels, polyacrylamide gels, synthetic porous materials, or nanostructures.
[0043] The sequencing procedure of the present invention can be initiated by addition of
nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme to the reaction mixture in the embodiment of Figures
1A-B. For the embodiment of Figure 1C, the primed nucleic acid can be added for initiation.
Other scenarios for initiation can be employed, such as establishing a preformed nucleic
acid-polymerase complex in the absence of divalent metal ions which are integral parts
of the active sites of polymerases (most commonly Mg
2+). The sequencing reaction can then be started by adding these metal ions. The preinitiation
complex of template could also be formed with the enzyme in the absence of nucleotides,
with fluorescent nucleotide analogs being added to start the reaction. See Huber et
al.,
"Escherichia coli Thioredoxin Stabilizes Complexes of Bacteriophage T7 DNA Polymerase and Primed Templates,"
J. Biol. Chem. 262:16224-16232 (1987), which is hereby incorporated by reference. Alternatively,
the process can be started by uncaging of a group on the oligonucleotide primer which
protects it from binding to the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme. Laser beam illumination
would then start the reaction coincidentally with the starting point of observation.
[0044] Figures 2A-C are schematic drawings showing the succession of steps used to sequence
nucleic acids in accordance with the present invention.
[0045] In Figure 2A, labelled nucleotide analogs are present in the proximity of the primed
complex of a nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme attached to the hybridized sequencing
primer and target nucleic acid molecule which are attached on the solid support. During
this phase of the sequencing process, the labelled nucleotide analogs diffuse or are
forced to flow through the extension medium towards and around the primed complex.
[0046] In accordance with Figure 2B, once a nucleotide analog has reached the active site
of the primed complex, it is bound to it and the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
establishes whether this nucleotide analog is complementary to the first open base
of the target nucleic acid molecule or whether it represents a mismatch. The mismatched
base will be rejected with the high probability that corresponds to the above-mentioned
high fidelity of the enzyme, whereas the complementary nucleotide analog is polymerized
to the sequencing primer to extend the sequencing primer.
[0047] During or after each labelled nucleotide analog is added to the sequencing primer,
the nucleotide analog added to the sequencing primer is identified. This is most efficiently
achieved by giving each nucleotide analog a different distinguishable label. By detecting
which of the different labels are added to the sequencing primer, the corresponding
nucleotide analog added to the sequencing primer can be identified and, by virtue
of its complementary nature, the base of the target nucleic acid which the nucleotide
analog complements can be determined. Once this is achieved, it is no longer necessary
for the nucleotide analog that was added to the sequencing primer to retain its label.
In fact, the continued presence of labels on nucleotide analogs complementing bases
in the target nucleic acid that have already been sequenced would very likely interfere
with the detection of nucleotide analogs subsequently added to the primer. Accordingly,
labels added to the sequencing primer are removed after they have been detected, as
shown in Figure 2C. This preferably takes place before additional nucleotide analogs
are incorporated into the oligonucleotide primer.
[0048] By repeating the sequence of steps described in Figures 2A-C, the sequencing primer
is extended and, as a result, the entire sequence of the target nucleic acid can be
determined. Although the immobilization embodiment depicted in Figures 2A-C is that
shown in Figure 1A, the alternative immobilization embodiments shown in Figures 1B-C
could similarly be utilized in carrying out the succession of steps shown in Figures
2A-C.
[0049] In carrying out the diffusion, incorporation, and removal steps of Figures 2A-C,
an extension medium containing the appropriate components to permit the nucleotide
analogs to be added to the sequencing primer is used. Suitable extension media include,
e.g., a solution containing 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 25 mM MgCl
2, 65 mM Nacl, 3mM DTT, (this is the extension medium composition recommended by the
manufacturer for Sequenase, a T7 mutant DNA polymerase), and nucleotide analogs at
an appropriate concentration to permit the identification of the sequence. Other media
that are appropriate for this and other polymerases are possible, with or without
accessory proteins, such as single-stranded binding proteins. Preferably, the extension
phase is carried out at 37°C for most thermally degradable polymerases, although other
temperatures at which the polymerase is active can be employed.
[0050] Once a labelled nucleotide analog is added to the sequencing primer, as noted above,
the particular label of the added moiety must be identified in order to determine
which type of nucleotide analog was added to the sequencing primer and, as a result,
what the complementary base of target nucleic acid is. How the label of the added
entity is determined depends upon the type of label being utilized. For the preferred
embodiment of the invention, discussion of the identification steps will be restricted
to the employment of nucleotide analogs carrying fluorescent moieties. However, other
suitable labels include chromophores, enzymes, antigens, heavy metals, magnetic probes,
dyes, phosphorescent groups, radioactive materials, chemiluminescent moieties, scattering
or fluorescent nanoparticles, Raman signal generating moieties, and electrochemical
detecting moieties. Such labels are known in the art and are disclosed for example
in Prober, et. al.,
Science 238: 336-41 (1997); Connell et. al.,
BioTechniques 5(4): 342-84 (1987); Ansorge, et. al.,
Nucleic Acids Res. 15(11): 4593- 602 (1987); and Smith et. al.,
Nature 321:674 (1986), which are hereby incorporated by reference. In some cases, such as
for chromophores, fluorophores, phosphorescent labels, nanoparticles, or Raman signaling
groups, it is necessary to subject the reaction site to activating radiation in order
to detect the label. This procedure will be discussed in detail below for the case
of fluorescent labels. Suitable techniques for detecting the fluorescent label include
time-resolved far-field microspectroscopy, near-field microspectroscopy, measurement
of fluorescence resonance energy transfer, photoconversion, and measurement of fluorescence
lifetimes. Fluorophore identification can be achieved by spectral wavelength discrimination,
measurement and separation of fluorescence lifetimes, fluorophore identification,
and/or background suppression. Fluorophore identification and/or background suppression
can be facilitated by fast switching between excitation modes and illumination sources,
and combinations thereof.
[0051] Figures 3A-B show plots of fluorescence signals vs. time during the succession of
steps (outlined in Figure 2) that is used to carry out the sequencing procedure of
the present invention. In essence, in this procedure, an incorporated nucleotide analog
will be distinguished from unincorporated ones (randomly diffusing through the volume
of observation or being convected through it by hydrodynamic or electrophoretic flow)
by analyzing the time trace of fluorescence for each distinguishable label simultaneously.
This is achieved by photon burst recordings and time-resolved fluorescence correlation
spectroscopy which distinguishes the continuing steady fluorescence of the incorporated
label (until removed by the mechanisms discussed below) from the intermittent emission
of the free fluorophores. See Magde et al., "Thermodynamic Fluctuations in a Reacting
System - Measurement by Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy,"
Phys. Rev. Lett. 29:705-708 (1972), Kask P. et al., "Fluorescence-Intensity Distribution Analysis
and its Application in Biomolecular Detection Technology,"
Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96: 13756-13761 (1999), and Eggeling et al., "Monitoring Conformational Dynamics
of a Single Molecule by Selective Fluorescence Spectroscopy,"
Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95: 1556-1561 (1998), which are hereby incorporated by reference. The sequence can
be deduced by combining time traces of all detection channels.
[0052] Figure 3A shows a plot of fluorescence signal vs. time during just the diffusion
phase of Figure 2A, assuming four different channels of fluorescence detection for
the four different bases (e.g., by employing four different labels, each with a different
fluorescence emission spectrum, by which they can be separated through optical filters).
Each peak in Figure 3A represents the burst of fluorescence resulting from the presence
of a nucleotide analog in the volume of observation, with each different nucleotide
analog being distinguished by its different label which generates peaks of different
colors (depicted in Figure 3A by different line patterns). The narrow width of these
peaks indicates that the nucleotide analogs have a brief residence time proximate
to the active site of sequencing, because they are freely diffusing or flowing through
the volume of observation. A peak of similar width is expected for the case of a
mismatched nucleotide analog transiently binding to the active site of the nucleic acid polymerizing
enzyme, and subsequent rejection of incorporation by the enzyme.
[0053] Figure 3B shows a plot of fluorescence signal vs. time during the incorporation and
subsequent removal phases of Figures 2B-C. As in Figure 3A, each peak of Figure 3B
represents the presence of a nucleotide analog with each different nucleotide analog
being distinguished by its different label which generates peaks of different colors
(depicted in Figure 3B by different line patterns). The narrow width of some peaks
in Figure 3B again relates to the nucleotide analogs which remain mobile within the
extension medium and do not extend the sequencing primer. Such narrow peaks result
because these nucleotide analogs have a brief residence time proximate to the active
site of sequencing, as explained for Figure 3A. On the other hand, the wider peaks
correspond to nucleotide analogs which have, at the active site, complementary bases
on the template nucleic acid molecule and serve to extend the sequencing primer. As
a result of their immobilization, these nucleotide analogs have wider peaks, because
they will remain in the observation volume during and after incorporation in the growing
nucleic acid strand, and thus continue to emit fluorescence. Their signal is only
terminated later in time as a result of the subsequent removal step which eliminates
continued fluorescence, and allowing the identification of subsequent incorporation
events.
[0054] Moving from left to right in Figure 3B (i.e. later in time), the sequence of wider
peaks corresponds to the complement of the sequence of the template nucleic acid molecule.
Figure 3C shows the final output of Figure 3B which can be achieved, for example,
by a computer program that detects the short bursts of fluorescence and discards them
in the final output. As a result of such filtering, only the peaks generated by immobilized
nucleotide analogs are present, and converted into the sequence corresponding to the
complement of sequence of the template nucleic acid molecule. This complementary sequence
is here ATACTA, therefore, the order of the bases of the template nucleic acid molecule
being sequenced is TATGAT.
[0055] Fluorescent labels can be attached to nucleotides at a variety of locations. Attachment
can be made either with or without a bridging linker to the nucleotide. Conventionally
used nucleotide analogs for labeling of nucleic acid with fluorophores carry the fluorescent
moiety attached to the
base of the nucleotide substrate molecule. However, it can also be attached to a sugar
moiety (e.g., deoxyribose) or the alpha phosphate. Attachment to the alpha phosphate
might prove advantageous, because this kind of linkage leaves the internal structure
of the nucleic acid intact, whereas fluorophores attached to the base have been observed
to distort the double helix of the synthesized molecule and subsequently inhibit further
polymerase activity. See Zhu et al., "Directly Labelled DNA Probes Using Fluorescent
Nucleotides with Different Length Linkers,"
Nucleic Acids Res. 22: 3418-3422 (1994), and Doublie et al., "Crystal Structure of a Bacteriophage T7
DNA Replication Complex at 2.2 Angstrom Resolution,"
Nature 391:251-258 (1998), which are hereby incorporated by reference. Thus, thiol-group-containing
nucleotides, which have been used (in the form of NTPs) for cross-linking studies
on RNA polymerase, could serve as primary backbone molecules for the attachment of
suitable linkers and fluorescent labels. See Hanna et al., "Synthesis and Characterization
of a New Photo-Cross-Linking CTP Analog and Its Use in Photoaffinity-Labeling Escherichia-coli
and T7-RNA Polymerases,"
Nucleic Acids Res. 21:2073-2079 (1993), which is hereby incorporated by reference.
[0056] In the conventional case where the fluorophore is attached to the base of the nucleotide,
it is typically equipped with fluorophores of a relatively large size, such as fluorescein.
However, smaller fluorophores, e.g., pyrene or dyes from the coumarin family, could
prove advantageous in terms of being tolerated to a larger extent by polymerases.
In fact, it is possible to synthesize a DNA fragment of 7,300 base pair length in
which one base type is fully replaced by the corresponding coumarin-labelled dNTP
using T7 DNA polymerase, whereas the enzyme is not able to carry out the corresponding
synthesis using fluorescein-labelled dNTPs.
[0057] In all of these cases, the fluorophore remains attached to the part of the substrate
molecule that is incorporated into the growing nucleic acid molecule during synthesis.
Suitable means for removal of the fluorophore after it has been detected and identified
in accordance with the sequencing scheme of the present invention include photobleaching
of the fluorophore or photochemical cleavage of the nucleotide and the fluorophore,
e.g., cleavage of a chemical bond in the linker. Removal of the fluorescent label
of already incorporated nucleotides, the rate of which can be adjusted by the laser
power, prevents accumulation of signal on the nucleic acid strand, thereby maximizing
the signal to background ratio for nucleotide identification. For this scheme, the
objective of the present invention is to detect all of the photons from each label
and then photobleach or photochemically cleave before or soon after the next few nucleotide
is incorporated in order to maintain adequate signal to noise values for subsequent
identification steps. The removal phase of the process of the present invention can
be carried out by any procedure suitable for removing a label without damaging the
sequencing reaction complex.
[0058] In addition to fluorescent labels that remain in the nucleic acid during synthesis,
nucleotides that are labelled fluorescently or otherwise and carry the label attached
to either the
beta or
gamma phosphate of the nucleotide can also be used in the sequencing procedure of the present
invention. Analogous compounds have previously been synthesized in the form ofNTP
analogs and have been shown to be excellent substrates for a variety of enzymes, including
RNA polymerases. See Yarbrough et al., "Synthesis and Properties of Fluorescent Nucleotide
Substrates for DNA-dependent RNA Polymerase,"
Journal of Biological Chemistry 254:12069-12073 (1979), and Chatterji et al., "Fluorescence Spectroscopy Analysis
of Active and Regulatory Sites of RNA Polymerase,"
Methods in Enzymology 274: 456-479 (1996), which are hereby incorporated by reference. During the synthesis
of DNA, the bond cleavage in the nucleotide occurs between the alpha and the beta
phosphate, causing the beta and gamma phosphates to be released from the active site
after polymerization, and the formed pyrophosphate subsequently diffuses or is convected
away from the nucleic acid. In accordance with the present invention, it is possible
to distinguish the event of binding of a nucleotide and its incorporation into nucleic
acid from events just involving the binding (and subsequent rejection) of a mismatched
nucleotide, because the rate constants of these two events are drastically different.
The rate-limiting step in the successive elementary steps of DNA polymerization is
a conformational change of the polymerase that can only occur
after the enzyme has established that the correct (matched) nucleotide is bound to the
active site. Therefore, an event of a mismatched binding of a nucleotide analog will
be much shorter in time than the event of incorporation of the correct base. See Patel
et al., "Pre-Steady-State Kinetic Analysis of Processive DNA Replication Including
Complete Characterization of an Exonuclease-Deficient Mutant,"
Biochemistry 30: 511-525 (1991) and Wong et al., "An Induced-Fit Kinetic Mechanism for DNA Replication
Fidelity: Direct Measurement by Single-Turnover Kinetics,"
Biochemistry 30: 511-525 (1991), which are hereby incorporated by reference. As a result, the
fluorescence of the label that is attached to the beta or gamma phosphate of the nucleotide
analog remains proximate to the polymerase for a longer time in case the nucleotide
analog is polymerized, and can be distinguished in accordance to the scheme described
above for Figure 3. After incorporation, the label will diffuse away with the cleaved
pyrophosphate. This procedure is shown in Figure 4. Figure 4A shows the structure
of 1-aminonaphthalene-5-sulfonate (AmNS)-dUTP, a representative example of a nucleotide
analog carrying a fluorescent label attached to the gamma phosphate, with the cleavage
position indicated by the dashed line. Figure 4B-D show the successive steps of incorporation
and release of the pyrophosphatefluorophore complex, in analogy to Figure 2. The time
trace of fluorescence for this scheme will be the same as shown in Figure 3. Thus,
this is an alternative scheme to the one outlined above in which the fluorophore is
first incorporated into the nucleic acid and the signal is subsequently eliminated
by photobleaching or photochemical cleavage after identification of the label.
[0059] The identification of the particular fluorescently labelled nucleotide analog that
is incorporated against the background of unincorporated nucleotides diffusing or
flowing proximally to the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme can be further enhanced
by employing the observation that for certain fluorescently labelled dNTPs (e.g.,
coumarin-5-dGTP, or AmNS-UTP), the presence of the base in the form of a covalent
linkage significantly reduces (i.e. quenches) the fluorescence of the label. See Dhar
et al., "Synthesis and Characterization of Stacked and Quenched Uridine Nucleotide
Fluorophores,"
Journal of Biological Chemistry 274: 14568-14572 (1999), and Draganescu et al., "Fhit-Nucleotide Specificity Probed
with Novel Fluorescent and Fluorogenic Substrates,"
Journal of Biological Chemistry 275: 4555-4560 (2000), which are hereby incorporated by reference. The interaction
between the fluorophore and the base quenches the fluorescence, so that the molecule
is not very fluorescent in solution by itself. However, when such a fluorescent nucleotide
is incorporated into the nucleic acid, the fluorophore gets disconnected from the
nucleotide and the fluorescence is no longer quenched. For the case of a linkage to
the beta or gamma phosphate of the nucleotide, this occurs naturally through the enzymatic
activity of the polymerase, in the case of fluorophores linked to the base, this would
have to be accomplished by photochemical cleavage. The signal of fluorescence from
the cleaved fluorophore is much brighter and can be detected over the possible background
of the plurality of quenched molecules in the vicinity of the polymerase/nucleic acid
complex.
[0060] Furthermore, since the fluorescence lifetime of the quenched molecules diffusing
in the solution is much shorter than the lifetime of the cleaved molecule, a further
enhancement of signal to background can be achieved by employing pulsed illumination
and time-gated photon detection. This is illustrated in Figure 5, showing the time-resolved
fluorescence decay curves for coumarin alone and coumarin-dGTP, respectively. Because
the coumarin fluorescence is quenched upon covalent linkage to dGTP, the lifetime
is much shorter than for the free dye alone, meaning that on average, fluorescent
photons are emitted much sooner after an excitation pulse, e.g., delivered by a pulsed
laser. By eliminating this time interval immediately after the pulse from detection,
which can be achieved, for example, with a variable delay line component (indicated
by the crosshatched bar with adjustable delay time of width T), the response window
of the detector can be gated such that only fluorescence emitted from the slow decay
component, in this case the free dye (or, in terms of the sequencing scheme, the cleaved
fluorophore) is detected, and thus background from unincorporated molecules is reduced
even further. Saavedra et al., "Time-Resolved Fluorimetric Detection of Terbium-Labelled
Deoxyribonucleic Acid Separated by Gel Electrophoresis,"
Analyst 114:835-838 (1989), which is hereby incorporated by reference.
[0061] Nucleotides can also be converted into fluorophores by photochemical reactions involving
radical formation. This technique has been utilized with serotonin and other biologically
relevant molecules. See Shear et al., "Multiphoton-Excited Visible Emission by Serotonin
Solutions,"
Photochem. Photobiol. 65:931-936 (1997), which is hereby incorporated by reference. The ideal photophysical
situation would be to have each nucleotide generate its own fluorescence signal. Unfortunately,
nucleic acid and the individual nucleotides are poor fluorophores emitting weakly
with minuscule quantum efficiencies and only on illumination with deep ultraviolet
light. However, the native ultraviolet fluorophore serotonin (5HT) can be photoionized
by simultaneous absorption of 4 infrared photons, to form a radical that reacts with
other ground state molecules to form a complex that emits bright green fluorescence
on absorption of 2 more photons. Subsequent discoveries showed that many small organic
molecules can undergo this multiphoton conversion.
[0062] Known quenching of fluorophores by nucleic acid components and by neighboring fluorophores
as well as resonance energy transfer may provide markers tolerated by the polymerase.
Furey et al., "Use of Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer to Investigate the Conformation
of DNA Substrates Bound to the Klenow Fragment,"
Biochemistry 37:2979-2990 (1998) and Glazer et al., "Energy-Transfer Fluorescent Reagents for
DNA Analyses,"
Curr. Op. Biotechn. 8:94-102 (1997), which are hereby incorporated by reference.
[0063] In the most efficient setup of the present invention, each base should be distinguished
by its own label so that the sequence can be deduced from the combined output of four
different channels as illustrated in Figure 3C. This can, for example, be accomplished
by using different fluorophores as labels and four different detection channels, separated
by optical filters. It is also possible to distinguish the labels by parameters other
than the emission wavelength band, such as fluorescence lifetime, or any combination
of several parameters for the different bases. Due to the possible interactions of
a fluorophore with a base, it is feasible to employ the same fluorophore to distinguish
more than one base. As an example, coumarin-dGTP has a much shorter fluorescence lifetime
than coumarin-dCTP so that the two bases could be distinguished by their difference
in fluorescence lifetime in the identification step of the sequencing scheme, although
they carry the same chemical substance as the fluorescent label.
[0064] The sequencing procedure can also be accomplished using less than 4 labels employed.
With 3 labels, the sequence can be deduced from sequencing a nucleic acid strand (1)
if the 4
th base can be detected as a constant dark time delay between the signals of the other
labels, or (2) unequivocally by sequencing both nucleic acid strands, because in this
case one obtains a positive fluorescence signal from each
base pair. Another possible scheme that utilizes two labels is to have one base labelled with
one fluorophore and the other three bases with another fluorophore. In this case,
the other 3 bases do not give a sequence, but merely a number of bases that occur
between the particular base being identified by the other fluorophore. By cycling
this identifying fluorophore through the different bases in different sequencing reactions,
the entire sequence can be deduced from sequential sequencing runs. Extending this
scheme of utilizing two labels only, it is even possible to obtain the full sequence
by employing only two labelled bases per sequencing run. As was pointed out by Sauer
et al., "Detection and Identification of Single Dye Labelled Mononucleotide Molecules
Released From an Optical Fiber in a Microcapillary: First Steps Towards a New Single
Molecule DNA Sequencing Technique,"
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 1:2471-77 (1999), which is hereby incorporated by reference, the sequence can be
determined with 2 labels alone if one carries out multiple sequencing reactions with
the possible combinations of the two labels. Therefore, in carrying out the process
of the present invention, it is desirable to label long stretches of nucleic acid
with at least 2 different labels.
[0065] Where sequencing is carried out by attaching the polymerase rather than the nucleic
acid to the support, it is important that the enzyme synthesizes long stretches of
nucleic acid, without the nucleic acid/protein complex falling apart. This is called
processive nucleic acid synthesis. At least for the system using T7 DNA polymerase and dCTP
completely replaced by coumarin-5-dCTP, the synthesis is fully processive over at
least 7300 basepairs (i.e., one polymerase molecule binds to the ssDNA template and
makes the entire second strand without falling off even once). With one label, the
process of the present invention can be carried out by watching the polymerase in
real time with base pair resolution and identifying the sequence profile of that base,
but without knowing the other bases. Therefore, using four different labels would
be most desirable for greater speed and accuracy as noted above. However, information
from measuring incorporation of nucleotides at a single molecule level, such as incorporation
rates for individual bases in a given sequence context, can provide a means of further
characterizing the sequence being synthesized. In respect to ensuring processive synthesis
for the second operational mode of the present invention, accessory proteins can be
utilized to make the nucleic acid/protein complex even more processive than using
the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme alone. For example, under optimal conditions,
T7 DNA polymerase is processive over at least 10,000 bases, whereas in complex with
the T7 helicase/primase protein, the processivity is increased to over 100,000 bases.
Kelman et al., "Processivity of DNA Polymerases: Two Mechanisms, One Goal"
Structure 6: 121-125 (1998), which is hereby incorporated by reference. A single-stranded binding
protein is also a suitable accessory protein. Processivity is especially important
at concentrations of nucleotide analogs that are below the saturation limit for a
particular polymerase, because it is known that processivity values for polymerases
are decreased at limiting substrate concentrations. See Patel et al., "Pre-Steady-State
Kinetic Analysis of Processive DNA Replication Including Complete Characterization
of an Exonuclease-Deficient Mutant,"
Biochemistry 30: 511-525 (1991), which is hereby incorporated by reference. Another possibility
to ensure processivity is the development or discovery of a polymerase that is fully
processive in the absence or at very low substrate concentrations (as is the case,
e.g., for an elongating RNA polymerase/DNA complex). In case the processivity is not
sufficiently high, it is possible to attach both the polymerase and the target nucleic
acid molecule on the support proximate to each other. This would facilitate the reformation
of the complex and continuation of DNA synthesis, in case the sequencing complex falls
apart occasionally. Non-processive polymerases can also be used in accordance with
the present invention for the case where the target nucleic acid is bound to the support.
Here, the same or a different polymerase molecule can reform the complex and continue
synthesis after dissociation of the complex.
[0066] One approach to carrying out the present invention is shown in Figure 6. Figure 6A
shows a system for sequencing with reagent solution R positioned at surface 2 to which
a primed target nucleic acid molecule complex is immobilized. By confining illumination
to a small area proximate to the active site of polymerase extension, e.g. by focusing
activating radiation with the help of lens or optical fiber 6, nucleotide analogs
that become incorporated into the growing nucleic acid strand are detected, because
they are located within the region of illumination. Figure 6B shows an enlarged section
of the device, with the polymerizing complex in the region of illumination. The substrate
concentration is chosen such that the number of nucleotide analogs in the surrounding
area in solution R are generally outside the illuminated region and are not detected.
[0067] As shown in Figure 6A, illumination source 10 (e.g., a laser) directs excitation
radiation by way of a dichroic beam splitter 8 through lens 6 and surface 2 to the
immobilized primed target nucleic acid complex. This excites the label immobilized
to the complex with the resulting emitted radiation passing back through surface 2
and lens or optical fiber 6. Dichroic beam splitter 8 allows passage of the emitted
radiation to detector (or array of several detectors) 12 which identifies the type
of emission. The detected emission information is then directed to computer 14 where
the nucleotide base corresponding to the emission is identified and its identity stored.
After multiple cycles of this procedure, the computer will be able to generate as
output the sequence of the target nucleic acid molecule. The corresponding output
of detection again corresponds to the scheme shown in Figure 3, as explained above.
[0068] According to another embodiment of the present invention, illumination and detection
of fluorescence may be achieved by making the support for the bound nucleic acid at
the end of a first single-mode optical fiber carrying the excitation light. Either
this and/or a second optical fiber may be used for collecting fluorescent photons.
By transmitting the radiation of appropriate exciting wavelength through the first
single-mode optical fiber, the label will fluoresce and emit the appropriate fluorescent
light frequency. The emitted fluorescent light will be partially transmitted into
the second optical fiber and separated spectrally such as by etched diffraction gratings
on the fiber. The returned light spectrum identifies the particular bound nucleotide
analog. Other techniques to deliver or collect light to the reaction site are conceivable,
such as the use of waveguided illumination or evanescent wave illumination, such as
total internal reflection illumination. One or several illumination sources, delivering
one- or multiphoton excitation, can be employed. Suitable detectors include avalanche
photodiode modules, photomultiplier tubes, CCD cameras, CMOS chips, or arrays or combinations
of several detectors.
[0069] Because there is likely to exist an upper limit to the concentration of nucleotide
analogs present in the observation volume that is correlated to a permissible signal
to background ratio and the ability to distinguish the
particular nucleotide analog that is being incorporated into nucleic acid from the nucleotide
analogs that are just diffusing around the polymerase, it is possible that the sequencing
procedure of the present invention must be carried out at concentrations below the
saturating limit for one or more nucleotide analogs.
[0070] For example, if conventional diffraction limited optics is used for detection of
fluorescence, the volume of observation is large so that substrate concentrations
in the range of nanomolar would have to be used for an acceptable background signal.
This is far below the usual k
m of polymerases (usually in the range of µM),
unless other means to reduce the background, such as lifetime discrimination as discussed
above (Figure 5), or volume confinement techniques, as described below, are utilized
to either "electronically" or physically reduce background fluorescence contributions.
In a conventionally focused laser beam, the focal volume is approximately 0.2 µm
3 (0.5 µm in diameter, 1.5 µm in the axial direction), corresponding to about 0.2 fl.
In order for only one fluorescent nucleotide analog to be present on average in the
excitation volume at any given time, the substrate concentration must be reduced to
ca. 10 nM, a concentration far below the k
m values of DNA polymerases (ca. 1-2 µM). See Polesky et al., "Identification of Residues
Critical for the Polymerase-Activity of the Klenow Fragment of DNAPolymerase-I from
Escherichia-coli," J. Biol. Chem. 265:14579-14591 (1990) and McClure et al., "The Steady State Kinetic Parameters and
Non-Processivity of
Escherichia coli Deoxyribonucleic Acid Polymerase I,"
J. Biol. Chem. 250:4073-4080 (1975), which are hereby incorporated by reference. Thus, if the concentration
of substrates is far below the k
m, processivity of nucleic acid synthesis has to be ensured by one of the above-mentioned
possibilities. Alternatively, if the volume of observation can be reduced, a higher
substrate concentration is permissible, which naturally increases processivity values.
Therefore, one objective of the present invention is concerned with an effective reduction
of the observation volume in order to reduce or prevent background fluorescence caused
by labelled free nucleotides and increase processivity. This can be achieved in a
number of ways.
[0071] One approach to reducing background noise involves electromagnetic field enhancement
near objects with small radii of curvature.
[0072] Due to the so-called "antenna effect," electromagnetic radiation is strongly enhanced
at the end of a sharp object, such as a metal tip. Using this procedure, the volume
being enhanced roughly corresponds to a sphere with a diameter that is close to the
diameter of the tip. This technique is disclosed in Sanchez, E.J., et al., "Near-Field
Fluorescence Microscopy Based on Two-Photon Excitation with Metal Tips,"
Phys. Rev. Lett. 82:4014-17 (1999), which is hereby incorporated by reference.
[0073] In carrying out the process of the present invention, a nucleic acid polymerizing
enzyme is positioned at the end of a metal tip with laser light being directed on
it, e.g. with a conventional objective lens. Because the effective illuminated volume
can now be on the order of the size of the polymerase itself, practically no fluorescence
from the fluorescent nucleotides that are diffusing in the solution will be detected.
Furthermore, the residence time of diffusing molecules through such a small volume
is extremely short. However, incorporation of a fluorescent nucleotide will be seen
as a relatively long burst of fluorescence, because that particular molecule will
stay in this small illuminated volume (until it is removed as explained above).
[0074] One approach to carrying out this embodiment of the present invention is shown in
Figures 7A to B. Figure 7A shows a system for sequencing with electromagnetic field
enhancement with reagent solution R positioned at surface 2 to which a primed target
nucleic acid molecule complex is immobilized. As shown in Figure 7B, a metal tip carrying
a polymerase is positioned in reagent solution R, creating a small region of illumination
around the immobilized polymerase upon illumination by lens 6. By confining illumination
to this small area, proximate to the active site of polymerase extension, nucleotide
analogs that become incorporated into the growing nucleic acid strand are detected,
because they are positioned within the region of illumination. On the other hand,
nucleotide analogs in the surrounding area in solution R are generally outside this
region and are not detected.
[0075] As shown in Figure 7A, illumination source 10 (e.g., a laser) directs one or multiphoton
excitation radiation with a nonzero polarization component parallel to the tip by
way of a dichroic beam splitter 8 through lens 6 and surface 2 to the immobilized
primed target nucleic acid complex. This excites the label immobilized to the complex
with the resulting emitted radiation passing back through surface 2 and lens 6. Dichroic
beam splitter 8 allows passage of the emitted radiation to detector 12 which identifies
the type of emission. The detected emission information is then directed to computer
14 where the nucleotide base corresponding to the emission is identified and its identity
stored. After multiple cycles of this procedure, the computer will be able to generate
as output the sequence of the target nucleic acid molecule. The corresponding output
of detection again corresponds to the scheme shown in Figure 3, as explained above.
The principal difference to the case discussed before is that the short peaks caused
by randomly diffusing nucleotide analogs through the focal volume are now extremely
short, because the volume of observation is so small. Therefore, this approach of
reduction of observation volume also results in enhanced time resolution in respect
to incorporated nucleotides versus unincorporated ones. This is true for all of the
other possibilities of volume confinement discussed further below.
[0076] In carrying out this procedure, the tips can be formed from a variety of materials,
e.g., metals such as platinum, silver, or gold. The fabrication of the tip can be
accomplished, e.g., by electrochemical etching of wires or by ion-beam milling. See
Sanchez, E.J., et al., "Near-Field Fluorescence Microscopy Based on Two-Photon Excitation
with Metal Tips,"
Phys. Rev. Lett. 82:4014-17 (1999), which is hereby incorporated by reference.
[0077] The nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme can be attached to the end of the tip either
by dipping the tip into a solution of nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme molecules,
applying an electric field at the tip with charges attracting the nucleic acid polymerizing
enzyme, or other techniques of coupling (e.g., with linkers, antibodies etc.). An
alternative mode of using electromagnetic field enhancement for this scheme of sequencing
is by positioning a bare tip in close proximity to an immobilized nucleic acid/ nucleic
acid polymerizing enzyme complex, rather than having the complex physically attached
to the end of the tip. A population of complexes could, for example, be immobilized
on a glass slide, and the tip is scanned over the surface until a useful complex for
sequencing is found. Suitable techniques for carrying out this nanopositioning have
been developed in the field of scanning probe microscopy.
[0078] Another approach for reducing background noise while carrying out the sequencing
method of the present invention involves the use of near-field illumination, as shown
in Figures 8A-B. Here, as depicted in Figure 8B, the primed target nucleic acid complex
is immobilized on surface 2 with opaque layer 16 being applied over surface 2. However,
small holes 18 are etched into the opaque layer 16. When illuminated from below, the
light cannot penetrate fully through the holes into reagent solution R, because the
diameter of holes 18 is smaller than one half of the light's wavelength. However,
there is some leakage which creates a small area of light right above surface 2 in
hole 18, creating a so-called near-field excitation volume. As shown in Figure 8B,
the primed target nucleic acid complex is positioned in hole 18 where it is illuminated
from below. By confining illumination to this small near-field area, incorporated
nucleotide analogs, positioned within the region of illumination, are detected. On
the other hand, the quantity of nucleotide analogs which do not serve to extend the
primer are few in number due to the small size of hole 18 and, to the small extent
detected, are easily distinguished from incorporated nucleotide analogs as described
above.
[0079] The system for carrying out this embodiment is shown in Figure 8A. Illumination source
10 (e.g., a laser) directs excitation radiation by way of dichroic beam splitter 8
through lens 6 and surface 2 to the immobilized primed target nucleic acid complex.
This excites the label immobilized to the complex with the resulting emitted radiation
passing back through surface 2 and lens 6. Dichroic beam splitter 8 allows passage
of the emitted radiation to detector 12 which identifies the type of emission. The
detected emission information is then directed to computer 14 where the nucleotide
base corresponding to the emission is identified and its identity stored. After multiple
cycles of this procedure, the computer will be able to generate as output the sequence
of the target nucleic acid molecule.
[0080] As a suitable alternative using near-field excitation volumes, the near-field volume
can also be generated by the use of one or many tapered optical fibers commonly used
in scanning near-field microscopy.
[0081] Nanofabrication is another technique useful in limiting the reaction volume to reduce
the level of background fluorescence. This involves confinement of the excitation
volume to a region within a nanochannel. Here, confinement is possible in two of three
spatial dimensions. A reaction vessel with a volume much smaller than focal volumes
attainable with far-field focusing optics is fabricated on a silicon or fused silica
wafer from optically transparent materials. Turner et al., "Solid-State Artificial
Gel for DNA Electrophoresis with an Integrated Top Layer,"
Proceedings of SPIE: Micro- and Nano-Fabricated Structures and Devices for Biomedical
Environmental Applications 3258:114-121 (1998), which is hereby incorporated by reference. The technique takes
advantage of a polysilicon sacrificial layer to define the working cavity of the channels.
Stem et al., "Nanochannel Fabrication for Chemical Sensors,"
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B15:2887-2891 (1997) and Chu et al., "Silicon Nanofilter with Absolute Pore Size
and High Mechanical Strength,"
Proc. SPIE - Int. Soc. Opt. Eng. (USA) 2593: 9-20 (1995), which are hereby incorporated by reference. The floor, ceiling,
and walls of the channels are made of silicon nitride, which is deposited conformally
over a patterned polysilicon sacrificial layer. The sacrificial layer is then removed
with a high-selectivity wet chemical etch, leaving behind only the silicon nitride.
This technique has demonstrated precise critical dimension (CD) control over a wide
range of structure sizes. The height of the polysilicon layer can be controlled to
within 5 nm over an entire device, and the lateral dimensions are limited in size
and CD control only by the lithography technique applied. The nanostructure can have
a punctuate, acicular, or resonant configuration to enhance label detection.
[0082] Figures 9A-B show a nanofabricated system in accordance with the present invention.
Shown in Figure 9B is an enlarged view of the cross-section of the nanochannel, with
reagents R located only in confined area 102, which is created by the channel walls
104 and 106. The primed target nucleic acid molecule complex is positioned within
confined area 102. As a result, when excitation light passes through confined area
102, the label of the incorporated nucleotide analog is excited and emits radiation
which is detected and identified as corresponding to a particular nucleotide base
added to the sequence of the extending primer. By passing the reagents through confined
area 102, the quantity of nucleotide analogs which do not extend the primer are few
in number at any particular point in time. To the small extent such mobile entities
are detected, they are easily distinguished from immobilized moieties as described
above.
[0083] Figure 9A shows a system for carrying out the nanochannel embodiment of the present
invention. Illumination source 10 (e.g., a laser) directs excitation radiation by
way of dichroic beam splitter 8 through lens 6 and nanochannel 106 to the immobilized
primed target nucleic acid complex. This excites the label immobilized to the complex
with the resulting emitted radiation passing back through lens 6. Dichroic beam splitter
8 allows passage of the emitted radiation to detector 12 which identifies the type
of emission. The detected emission information is then directed to computer 14 where
the nucleotide base corresponding to the emission is identified and its identity stored.
After multiple cycles of this procedure, the computer will be able to generate as
output the sequence of the target nucleic acid molecule.
[0084] Figures 10A-B show systems for supplying reagents to a nanofabricated confinement
system in accordance with the present invention. In Figure 10A, the reagents, which
include dATP, dCTP, dGTP, dUTP, the nucleic acid source, and buffer are held in separate
reservoirs and connected through separate conduits to manifold 200 where the reagents
are mixed together before entering nanochannel 202. The components of this system
upstream and downstream of nanochannel 202 can be combined as a microstructure. In
the process of passing rapidly through nanochannel 202, the reagents move rapidly
through reaction zone 204 where the sequencing procedure of the present invention
is carried out. From nanochannel 202, the residual reagents R pass through outlet
206. The system of Figure 10B is generally similar to that of Figure 10A, but the
former system is on a single chip with pads to connect the system to fluid reservoirs.
In particular, the reservoir for each of the reagents is coupled to the chip 208 via
inlet pads 210a-f, while the outlet for discharged reagents is connected to pad 212.
[0085] Nanofabricated channels of 75 nm width and 60 nm height have been manufactured with
excellent optical transparency and used for DNA flow control. See Turner et al., "Solid-State
Artificial Gel for DNA Electrophoresis with an Integrated Top Layer,"
Proceedings of SPIE: Micro- and Nano-Fabricated Structures and Devices for Biomedical
Environmental Applications 3258:114-121 (1998), which is hereby incorporated by reference. By placing the nucleic
acid synthesis complex into a channel of depth z = 25 nm, minimizing the x-dimension
of the focused laser beam to ca. 300 nm, and fixing the y-dimension by the channel
width at 100 nm, the effective volume of observation can be reduced to 7.5 x 10
-4 µm
3, corresponding to 0.75 attoliters. Here, the concentration for only one substrate
molecule to be present in the excitation volume amounts to 2 µM, a substrate concentration
well within the range of rapid and efficient nucleic acid polymerization. Moreover,
since there are four different nucleotide analogs, each to be distinguished, the effective
substrate concentration for the polymerase is four times higher. If a smaller effective
volume of observation is required, the y-dimension in the flow direction can be reduced
to about 100 nm by illumination with the interference pattern of two objectives at
about 90° axial angles as in theta microscopy. See Stelzer et al., "A New Tool for
the Observation of Embryos and Other Large Specimens: Confocal Theta Fluorescence
Microscopy,"
J. Microscopy 179:1-10 (1995), which is hereby incorporated by reference.
[0086] To excite the labels, activating energy is focused proximate to the active site of
polymerase extension (i.e. where the polymerase is located). To the extent this active
site moves during extension (e.g., as a result of movement by the polymerase), the
focus of the activating energy is also moved.
[0087] A necessary consideration is the choice between one-photon and multiphoton excitation
of fluorescence. Multiphoton excitation provides some powerful advantages, but it
is more complex and more expensive to implement. Multiphoton excitation fluorescence
utilizing simultaneous absorption of two or more photons from bright, femtosecond
infrared pulses generated by ultrafast solid state mode locked lasers provides the
most promising approach. See Denk et al., "2-Photon Laser Scanning Fluorescence Microscopy,"
Science 248:73-76 (1990), which is hereby incorporated by reference. Sensitivity to single
molecule fluorescence is routinely obtained and is temporally resolvable to the microsecond
level with fluorescence lifetimes measurable with reasonable accuracy for single molecules.
See Mertz et al., "Single-Molecule Detection by Two-Photon-Excited Fluorescence,"
Optics Lett. 20:2532-2534 (1995) and Eggeling et al., "Monitoring Conformational Dynamics of a
Single Molecule by Selective Fluorescence Spectroscopy,"
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 95:1556-1561 (1998), which are hereby incorporated by reference.
[0088] The ideal fluorescent signal for single molecule sequencing consists of time resolved
bursts of distinguishable fluorescence as each nucleotide is bound. Thus, in the ideal
situation, a time-resolved train of color resolved fluorescent bursts could be obtained
if nucleotides were bound at distinguishable intervals as described in Figure 3. Full
resolution of the time sequence of events therefore offers the best background reduction
and reliable possibility for nucleotide recognition. Since with the currently available
polymerases, labelled nucleotides are most likely added no faster than at 1 millisecond
intervals, it should be possible that all of the detected fluorescence photons from
each labelled nucleotide can be accumulated and removed before the next fluorescent
nucleotide is bound. This ideal burst-gap-burst sequence is realized although actually
every molecular kinetic step of polymerization involves the stochastic Poisson process.
For a single Poisson process, the most probable time delay between events is zero
although the average delay would be larger than zero. However, the process of incorporation
of a single dNTP into DNA by DNA polymerase is a sequential multistep process of at
least 5 different events. See Patel et al., "Pre-Steady-State Kinetic Analysis of
Processive DNA Replication Including Complete Characterization of an Exonuclease-Deficient
Mutant,"
Biochemistry 30: 511-525 (1991). The sequential summation of these steps will result in a most
likely time delay larger than zero. Therefore, the photon bursts are not very likely
to overlap.
[0089] For conventional fluorophores, about 10
5 photons per fluorophore will be emitted before photobleaching. Detection of (at most)
1% of the emission yields about 10
3 photons for a relative noise uncertainty of 3%. Background due to free nucleotides
is reduced to a nearly negligible level by the schemes discussed above, e.g., by limiting
the size of the focal volume to contain only about one free labelled nucleotide, with
very short dwell times.
[0090] The expected detection level is about 10
3 photons from each labelled nucleotide, in about 10
-3s. This is an acceptable counting rate, ~10
6 Hz, and an acceptable fluorophore excitation rate at about one tenth of singlet excited
state saturation. This fluorescence excitation creates a detected burst of ~10
3 photons in about 1 ms at the characteristic wavelength for each labelled nucleotide,
leaving, on average, a gap of about 1 ms before the next nucleotide is added, well
within the average time intervals between nucleotide addition at probably more than
one millisecond. Possible burst overlaps can be analyzed and resolved by the analytical
treatment of continuous measurements of data in time coherent sequences in (at best)
4 channels for most accurate sequencing results. With the photon statistics available
in the experimental design and recently developed coupled multichannel analyzers and
operational software, error rates can be made acceptable with 4 labelled nucleotides
or with the strategies involving a smaller number of labels as outlined above.
[0091] Spectral resolution of four fluorophores identifying the nucleotides can be achieved
with two-photon excitation by infrared pulses. All 4 fluorophores can be simultaneously
excited due to the wide excitation bands usually characteristic of two-photon excitation.
See Xu et al., "Multiphoton Excitation Cross-Sections of Molecular Fluorophores,"
Bioimaging 4:198-207 (1996), which is hereby incorporated by reference. Alternatively, multiple
excitation sources can be used in combination or by fast switching to illuminate the
sequencing complex if necessary. Spectral separation is accomplished with conventional
interference filters but emission spectra may overlap, complicating the time correlation
analysis and perhaps requiring cross correlation of the 4 color channels for correction.
If compatibility of fluorophores with the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme limits
the applicability of suitable dye sets, a combination of techniques can be applied
to distinguish the labels.
[0092] Another potential way to distinguish incorporation of a nucleotide into the growing
nucleic acid strand consists of measuring changes in fluorescence lifetime. Fluorescence
lifetime of an oligonucleotide pyrene probe has been observed to vary in a sequence-dependent
manner upon DNA attachment. See Dapprich J, "Fluoreszenzdetection Molekularer Evolution
(Fluorescence Detection of Molecular Evolution)," Dissertation, Georg-August-Univ.,
Goettingen, Germany (1994), which is hereby incorporated by reference. Photophysical
interactions between the fluorophore and the base result in characteristic fluorescence
decay times, and can also be used to differentiate the bases, as discussed above.
Lifetime determination and discrimination on the single molecule level has recently
been demonstrated so that discrimination between bases being incorporated and freely
diffusing nucleotides could be carried out by fluorescence lifetime measurements.
See Eggeling et al., "Monitoring Conformational Dynamics of a Single Molecule by Selective
Fluorescence Spectroscopy,"
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 95:1556-1561 (1998), which is hereby incorporated by reference.
[0093] Time correlated measurements in four fluorescence wavelength channels can be used
effectively in carrying out the process of the present invention. Overlap of emission
spectra may allow signals from one fluorophore to enter several channels but the relative
count rate and timing identifies the label correctly. Simultaneous signals from an
incorporated labelled nucleotide and a free label are distinguishable by the time
duration and magnitude of the bursts, which are limited for the free label. Label
ambiguity can be further reduced by utilization of fluorescence decay time measurements
which can be realized with the available 0.1 ns resolution of time delays for fluorescence
photon emission after each femtosecond laser excitation pulse. The fluorescence photon
emission and photobleaching processes themselves are also stochastic processes but
involve sufficiently disparate quantum efficiencies that error rates should be negligible.
[0094] In rejecting background from the freely diffusing or flowing labelled nucleotides,
the very short dwell time of any individual free nucleotide in the focal volume is
advantageously used. The characteristic diffusion time for a free nucleotide analog
across the open dimension of the focal volume (in the worst case of non-interferometric
far-field illumination) will be τ
D~ y
2/4D ~ 2 x 10
-5 sec, with y being the focal volume dimension and D the diffusion coefficient. An
iontophoretic flow velocity of 1 cm/s is sufficient to keep its short bursts of fluorescence
to less than 10
-5 sec and reduce the photon numbers by an order of magnitude. This will assure discrimination
against free nucleotides and identify the time series of bursts representing the nucleic
acid sequence, provided the nucleotide analog concentrations are appropriately low
as discussed. Magde et al., "Thermodynamic Fluctuations in a Reacting System - Measurement
by Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy,"
Phys. Rev. Lett. 29:705-708 (1972) and Maiti et al., "Measuring Serotonin Distribution in Live Cells
with Three-Photon Excitation,"
Science 275:530-532 (1997), which are hereby incorporated by reference. Discrimination can
be improved by utilizing volume confinement techniques or time-gated detection, as
discussed above.
[0095] Detection of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) from a donor fluorophore
(e.g., a donor attached to the polymerase) to adjacent nucleotide analog acceptors
that are incorporated into the growing nucleic acid strand suggests a further elegant
possibility of lowering background from incorporated nucleotides. FRET only reaches
very short distances including about 20 nucleotides and decays at the reciprocal sixth
power of distance. The excited donor molecule transfers its energy only to nearby
acceptor fluorophores, which emit the spectrally resolved acceptor fluorescence of
each labelled nucleotide as it is added. Already incorporated nucleotides farther
away from the donor would not contribute to the fluorescent signal since distance
and orientation constraints of energy transfer reduce the effective range of observation
to less than 60 Å, thereby effectively eliminating background fluorescence from unincorporated
nucleotides. Without photobleaching, the method requires high sensitivity since repeat
nucleotides leave the range of FRET at the same rate that new nucleotides are added,
possibly creating sequence recognition ambiguity. Photobleaching or photochemical
cleavage, or their combination as discussed above could resolve the problem. Photobleaching
of the donor molecules using FRET can be avoided if it is the template nucleic acid
that is attached and the donor bearing nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme is periodically
replaced.
[0096] A final important consideration for the success of the present invention concerns
the stability of the protein/nucleic acid complex in activating radiation, such as
tightly focussed laser beams. It is not expected that the enzyme is affected by the
excitation illumination, because wavelengths are chosen at which proteins do not absorb,
the stability of the polymerase in the laser beam should be sufficiently high to allow
for accurate sequencing runs over long read lengths. Previous investigations exposing
enzymes to strong laser light have examined photodamage and loss of function. Immobilized
RNA polymerase/DNA complexes showed inactivation times of 82 ± 58 s for 1047 nm Nd:Y
laser light of 82 to 99 mW laser power focused at the protein, corresponding to intensities
of approximately 10
8 W/cm
2. Other studies on the actomyosin or kinesin systems indicated similar stability.
Both DNA and biotin-avidin linkages have been shown to be photostable in optical traps.
See Yin et al., "Transcription Against an Applied Force,"
Science 270: 1653-1657 (1995), Svoboda et al. "Direct Observation of Kinesin Stepping by
Optical Trapping Interferometry,"
Nature 365: 721-727 (1993), and Molloy et al., "Movement and Force Produced by a Single
Myosin Head"
Nature 378: 209-212 (1995), which are hereby incorporated by reference. For fluorescence
detection of nucleotide analogs according to the present invention, laser powers (intensities)
typical of FCS measurements are expected, on the order of 0.1 mW (10
5 W/cm
2) for one-photon and 1 mW (10
6-10
7 W/cm
2) for two-photon excitation, thereby being significantly lower than in the case of
optical tweezers described above. Enzyme stability should therefore be higher, moreover,
with the rapid speed of sequencing proposed by this method (e.g., 100 bp/s), even
80 s are sufficient to determine the sequence of 8 kb nucleic acid.
[0097] Although the invention has been described in detail for the purposes of illustration,
it is understood that such detail is solely for that purpose, and variations can be
made therein by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope
of the invention which is defined by the following claims.
[0098] The following paragraphs further describe the invention:
- 1. A method of sequencing a target nucleic acid molecule having a plurality of nucleotide
bases comprising:
providing a complex of a nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme and the target nucleic acid
molecule oriented with respect to each other in a position suitable to add a nucleotide
analog at an active site complementary to the target nucleic acid;
providing a plurality of types of nucleotide analogs proximate to the active site,
wherein each type of nucleotide analog is complementary to a different nucleotide
in the target nucleic acid sequence;
polymerizing a nucleotide analog at an active site, wherein the nucleotide analog
being added is complementary to the nucleotide of the target nucleic acid, leaving
the added nucleotide analog ready for subsequent addition of nucleotide analogs;
identifying the nucleotide analog added at the active site as a result of said polymerizing;
and
repeating said providing a plurality of types of nucleotide analogs, said polymerizing,
and said identifying so that the sequence of the target nucleic acid is determined.
- 2. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
is selected from the group consisting of a DNA polymerase, an RNA polymerase, reverse
transcriptase, and mixtures thereof.
- 3. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
is a thermostable polymerase.
- 4. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
is a thermodegradable polymerase.
- 5. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the target nucleic acid molecule is
selected from the group consisting of double-stranded DNA, single stranded DNA, single
stranded DNA hairpins, DNA/RNA hybrids, RNA with a recognition site for binding of
the polymerase, and RNA hairpins.
- 6. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
is bound to the target nucleic acid molecule complex at an origin of replication,
a nick or gap in a double-stranded target nucleic acid, a secondary structure in a
single-stranded target nucleic acid, a binding site created by an accessory protein,
or a primed single stranded nucleic acid.
- 7. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
is provided with one or more accessory proteins to modify its activity.
- 8. A method according to paragraph 7, wherein the accessory protein is selected from
the group consisting of a single-stranded binding protein, a primase, and helicase.
- 9. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
is processive.
- 10. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
is non-processive.
- 11. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the nucleotide analogs are selected
from the group consisting of a ribonucleotide, a deoxyribonucleotide, a modified ribonucleotide,
a modified deoxyribonucleotide, a peptide nucleotide, a modified peptide nucleotide,
and a modified phosphate-sugar backbone nucleotide.
- 12. A method according to paragraph 1 further comprising:
hybridizing an oligonucleotide primer to the target nucleic acid molecule prior to
or during said providing a plurality of nucleotide analogs.
- 13. A method according to paragraph 12, wherein the oligonucleotide primer comprises
nucleotides selected from the group consisting of ribonucleotides, deoxyribonucleotides,
modified ribonucleotides, modified deoxyribonucleotides, peptide nucleic acids, modified
peptide nucleic acids, and modified phosphate-sugar backbone nucleotides.
- 14. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the nucleotide analogs are provided
with a label.
- 15. A method according to paragraph 14, wherein the label is selected from the group
consisting of chromophores, fluorescent moieties, enzymes, antigens, heavy metals,
magnetic probes, dyes, phosphorescent groups, radioactive materials, chemiluminescent
moieties, scattering or fluorescent nanoparticles, Raman signal generating moieties,
and electrochemical detection moieties.
- 16. A method according to paragraph 14, wherein the label is attached to the nucleotide
analog at its base, sugar moiety, alpha phosphate, beta phosphate, or gamma phosphate.
- 17. A method according to paragraph 14, wherein the label is attached to the nucleotide
analog with a linker.
- 18. A method according to paragraph 14, wherein the label is attached to the nucleotide
analog without a linker.
- 19. A method according to paragraph 14 further comprising:
removing the label from the nucleotide analog during or after said identifying and
before said polymerizing many further nucleotide analogs at the active site.
- 20. A method according to paragraph 19, wherein said removing is carried out by bleaching
the label.
- 21. A method according to paragraph 20, wherein said bleaching is carried out by photobleaching
with radiation which is adjusted to induce and control label removal.
- 22. A method according to paragraph 19, wherein said removing is carried out by cleaving
the label from the nucleotide analog.
- 23. A method according to paragraph 22, wherein beta-or gammalabeled nucleotide analogs
are enzymatically cleaved.
- 24. A method according to paragraph 14, wherein each of the plurality of types of
nucleotide analogs have different labels which are distinguished from one another
during said identifying.
- 25. A method according to paragraph 14, wherein three or less of the plurality of
types of nucleotide analogs have a different label.
- 26. A method according to paragraph 14, wherein the different types of nucleotide
analogs have the same label but are distinguished by different properties due to the
presence of base fluorophores, quenched fluorophores, or fluorogenic nucleotide analogs.
- 27. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
carries a label and said identifying is carried out by detecting interaction between
the label and the nucleotide analog.
- 28. A method according to paragraph 27, wherein the label is a fluorescence resonance
energy transfer donor or acceptor.
- 29. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein said identifying is carried out by
non-optical procedures.
- 30. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein said identifying is carried out by
optical procedures selected from the group consisting of far-field microspectroscopy,
near-field microspectroscopy, evanescent wave or wave guided illumination, nanostructure
enhancement, and combinations thereof.
- 31. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein said identifying is carried out by
utilizing single and/or multiphoton excitation, fluorescence resonance energy transfer,
or photoconversion.
- 32. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein said identifying is achieved by spectral
wavelength discrimination, measurement and separation of fluorescence lifetimes, fluorophore
identification and/or background suppression.
- 33. A method according to paragraph 32, wherein fluorophore identification and/or
background suppression utilizes fast switching between excitation modes and illumination
sources, and combinations thereof.
- 34. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein said providing a complex comprises:
positioning either (1) an oligonucleotide primer or (2) the target nucleic acid molecule
on a support;
hybridizing either (1) the target nucleic acid molecule to the positioned oligonucleotide
primer or (2) an oligonucleotide primer to the positioned target nucleic acid molecule,
to form a primed target nucleic acid molecule complex; and
providing the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme on the primed target nucleic acid molecule
complex in a position suitable to move along the target nucleic acid molecule and
extend the oligonucleotide primer at an active site.
- 35. A method according to paragraph 34, wherein said hybridizing is carried out by
additionally binding the end of the target nucleic acid molecule opposite to that
bound to the oligonucleotide primer to a second oligonucleotide primer positioned
on the support.
- 36. A method according to paragraph 34, wherein the support and either the oligonucleotide
primer or the target nucleic acid molecule are bound reversibly or irreversibly with
corresponding components of a covalent or non-covalent binding pair selected from
the group consisting of an antigen-antibody binding pair, a streptavidin-biotin binding
pair, photoactivated coupling molecules, and a pair of complementary nucleic acids.
- 37. A method according to paragraph 34, where the oligonucleotide primer is positioned
on the support and the target nucleic acid molecule is hybridized to the positioned
oligonucleotide primer.
- 38. A method according to paragraph 34, wherein the target nucleic acid molecule is
positioned on the support and the oligonucleotide primer is hybridized to the positioned
target nucleic acid molecule.
- 39. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein said providing a complex comprises:
positioning, on a support, a double stranded nucleic acid molecule comprising the
target nucleic acid and having a recognition site proximate the active site, and
providing the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme on the target nucleic acid molecule
in a position suitable to move along the target nucleic acid molecule.
- 40. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein said providing a complex comprises:
positioning a nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme on a support in a position suitable
for the target nucleic acid complex to move relative to the nucleic acid polymerizing
enzyme.
- 41. A method according to paragraph 40, wherein the support and the nucleic acid polymerizing
enzyme are bound reversibly or irreversibly with corresponding components of a covalent
or non-covalent binding pair selected from the group consisting of an antigen-antibody
binding pair, a streptavidin-biotin binding pair, photoactivated coupling molecules,
and a pair of complementary nucleic acids.
- 42. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
or the target nucleic acid is positioned on an adjustable support.
- 43. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
or the target nucleic acid is positioned in a gel with pores.
- 44. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the target nucleic acid and the nucleic
acid polymerizing enzyme are positioned on a solid support proximate to each other.
- 45. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein said identifying is carried out by
reducing background noise resulting from free nucleotide analogs.
- 46. A method according to paragraph 45, wherein said identifying comprises:
directing activating radiation to a region substantially corresponding to the active
site and
detecting the nucleotide analog polymerized at the active site.
- 47. A method according to paragraph 45, wherein said identifying distinguishes nucleotide
analogs polymerized at the active site from free nucleotide analogs.
- 48. A method according to paragraph 45, wherein said identifying is carried out in
a confined region proximate to the active site.
- 49. A method according to paragraph 48, wherein said identifying is carried out in
a nanostructure.
- 50. A method according to paragraph 49, wherein the nanostructure is a punctuate,
acicular, or resonant nanostructure which enhances said detecting.
- 51. A method according to paragraph 48, wherein nucleotide analogs that are not polymerized
at the active site move rapidly through a microstructure to and from the confined
region.
- 52. A method according to paragraph 51, wherein the microstructure comprises:
a plurality of channels to direct different nucleotide analogs to the confined region
and
a discharge channel to permit materials to be removed from the confined region, and
the nanostructure comprises:
a housing defining the confined region and constructed to facilitate said identifying.
- 53. A method according to paragraph 45, wherein said identifying is carried out by
electromagnetic field enhancement with electromagnetic radiation being enhanced proximate
to an object with a small radius of curvature adjacent to the active site.
- 54. A method according to paragraph 45, wherein said identifying is carried out by
near-field illumination of cavities in which the primed target nucleic acid molecule
is positioned.
- 55. A method according to paragraph 45, wherein said identifying is carried out with
optical fibers proximate to the complex.
- 56. A method according to paragraph 45, wherein said identifying and said reducing
background is carried out by time gated delay of photon detection.
- 57. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein said method is carried out by sequencing
different target nucleic acid molecules at a plurality of different locations on an
array.
- 58. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein said method is carried out by simultaneously
or sequentially sequencing the same target nucleic acid and combining output from
such sequencing.
- 59. An apparatus suitable for sequencing a target nucleic acid molecule comprising:
a support;
a nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme or oligonucleotide primer suitable to bind to a
target nucleic acid molecule, wherein said nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme or said
oligonucleotide primer is positioned on said support; and
a microstructure defining a confined region containing said support and said nucleic
acid polymerizing enzyme or said oligonucleotide primer and configured to permit labeled
nucleotide analogs that are not positioned on the support to move rapidly through
the confined region.
- 60. An apparatus according to paragraph 59, wherein the microstructure comprises:
a plurality of channels to direct different types of nucleotide analogs to the confined
region and
a discharge channel to permit materials to be removed from the confined region and
a nanostructure constructed to facilitate identification of nucleotide analogs positioned
on the support.
- 61. An apparatus suitable for sequencing a target nucleic acid molecule comprising:
a support;
a nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme or oligonucleotide primer suitable to hybridize
to a target nucleic acid molecule, wherein said nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme or
said oligonucleotide primer is positioned on said support;
a housing defining a confined region containing said support and said nucleic acid
polymerizing enzyme or said oligonucleotide primer and constructed to facilitate identification
of labeled nucleotide analogs positioned on the support; and
optical waveguides proximate to the confined region to focus activating radiation
on the confined region and to collect radiation from the confined region.
1. A method of sequencing a target nucleic acid molecule comprising:
(a) providing a mixture comprising the target nucleic acid molecule, a primer complementary
to the target nucleic acid molecule, a nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme, and a plurality
of types of nucleotides or nucleotide analogs to be incorporated into a growing nucleic
acid strand at an active site complementary to the target nucleic acid;
(b) subjecting the mixture of step (a) to a polymerization reaction under conditions
suitable for formation of the growing nucleic acid strand by template-directed extension
of primer; and
(c) identifying a time sequence of incorporation of nucleotides or nucleotide analogs
into the growing nucleic acid strand at the active site while the template-directed
extension of primer is taking place, and thereby determining the sequence of said
target nucleic acid.
2. A method of sequencing a target nucleic acid molecule comprising:
subjecting the target nucleic acid molecule to a polymerization reaction to yield
a growing nucleic acid strand that is complementary to the target nucleic acid molecule
in the presence of a reaction mixture of plurality of types of nucleotides or nucleotide
analogs; and identifying during said subjecting step, the nucleotide or nucleotide
analog incorporated into the growing strand to determine a time sequence of incorporation
of said plurality of types of nucleotides or nucleotide analogs in said reaction mixture
into the growing nucleotide strand.
3. A method according to claim 1 or claim 2 wherein a plurality of incorporated nucleotides
or nucleotide analogs are identified per second during said polymerization reaction.
4. A method according to claim 1 or claim 2 for sequencing a plurality of target nucleic
acid molecules wherein said method yields a population of growing nucleic acid strands
that are complementary to their respective target nucleic acid molecules; and wherein
a time sequence of incorporation of said plurality of types of nucleotides or nucleotide
analogs into at least two growing nucleic acid strands in said population is identified,
the time sequence for each of said at least two growing nucleic acid strands being
different.
5. A method according to claim 4 wherein said time sequence of incorporation of a plurality
of types of nucleotides or nucleotide analogs into at least two growing nucleic acid
strands in said population is identified in real-time.
6. A method according to claim 1 or 2 wherein said identifying is performed without interrupting
the template-directed extension of primer.
7. A method according to claim 1 or 2 wherein said identifying is performed without adjusting
components of the mixture prior to reading the next base sequence.
8. A method according to claim 3 wherein said identifying step identifies more than 100
incorporated analogues per second.
9. A method according to any preceding claim wherein said time sequence of incorporation
is a time sequence of at least 10,000 nucleotides or nucleotide analogs.
10. A method according to any preceding claim wherein said time sequence of incorporation
is a time sequence of at least 3 nucleotides or nucleotide analogs.
11. A method according to any of claims 1 to 5 wherein the polymerization reaction is
performed by a nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme selected from the group consisting
of a DNA polymerase, an RNA polymerase, a reverse transcriptase, and a mixture thereof.
12. A method according to claim 11 wherein the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme is a thermostable
polymerase or a thermodegradable polymerase.
13. A method according to any preceding claim wherein the target nucleic acid molecule
is selected from the group consisting of double-stranded DNA, single-stranded DNA,
single stranded DNA hairpins, DNA/RNA hybrids, RNA with a recognition site for binding
of the polymerase, and RNA hairpins.
14. A method according to any preceding claim wherein the nucleotide analogs are selected
from the group consisting of a ribonucleotide, a deoxyribonucleotide, a modified ribonucleotide,
a modified deoxyribonucleotide, a peptide nucleotide, a modified peptide nucleotide,
and a modified phosphate-sugar backbone nucleotide.
15. A method according to any preceding claim wherein the nucleotides or nucleotide analogs
further comprise a label, preferably wherein the label is selected from the group
consisting of chromophores, fluorescent moieties, enzymes, antigens, heavy metals,
magnetic probes, dyes, phosphorescent groups, radioactive materials, chemiluminescent
moieties, scattering or fluorescent nanoparticles, Raman signal generating moieties,
and electrochemical detection moieties.
16. A method according to claim 15 wherein the label is attached to the nucleotide or
nucleotide analog at a base, sugar moiety, alpha phosphate, beta phosphate, or gamma
phosphate of said nucleotide or nucleotide analog.
17. A method according to claim 15 wherein each of the plurality of types of nucleotides
or nucleotide analogs have different labels which are distinguished from one another
during said identifying.
18. A method according to claim 15 wherein three or less of the plurality of types of
nucleotides or nucleotide analogs have a different label.
19. A method according to claim 15 wherein the different types of nucleotides or nucleotide
analogs have the same label but are distinguished by different properties due to a
presence of base fluorophores, quenched fluorophores, or fluorogenic nucleotides or
nucleotide analogs.
20. A method according to any preceding claim wherein the nucleic acid polymerizing enzyme
carries a label and said identifying is carried out by detecting interaction between
the label and the nucleotide or nucleotide analog.
21. A method according to claim 20 wherein the label is a fluorescence resonance energy
transfer donor or acceptor.
22. A method according to any preceding claim wherein said identifying is carried out
by optical procedures selected from the group consisting of far-field microspectroscopy,
near-field microspectroscopy, evanescent wave or wave guided illumination, nanostructure
enhancement, and combinations thereof.
23. A method according to any preceding claim wherein said identifying is carried out
by single photon excitation, multiphoton excitation, fluorescence resonance energy
transfer, photoconversion or a combination thereof.
24. A method according to any of claims 1 to 22 wherein said identifying is achieved by
spectral wavelength discrimination, measurement and separation of fluorescence lifetimes,
fluorophore identification, background suppression, or a combination thereof.
25. A method according to claim 24 wherein fluorophore identification or background suppression
utilizes fast switching between excitation modes and illumination sources, and combinations
thereof.
26. A method according to any preceding claim wherein said target nucleic acids are attached
to a support.
27. The method according to claim 1 wherein said target nucleic acid is hybridized to
an oligonucleotide which is attached to a support, or according to claim 4 wherein
each target nucleic acid is hybridized to a separate oligonucleotide which is attached
to a support.
28. The method of claim 1 to 25 wherein said DNA polymerizing enzyme is attached to a
support.
29. A method according to any preceding claim wherein said identifying is carried out
by reducing background noise resulting from free nucleotides or nucleotide analogs.
30. A method according to claim 29 wherein said identifying comprises directing activating
radiation to a region substantially corresponding to the active site and detecting
the nucleotide or nucleotide analog polymerized at the active site.
31. A method according to claim 29 wherein said identifying distinguishes nucleotides
or nucleotide analogs polymerized at the active site from free nucleotides or nucleotide
analogs.
32. A method according to claim 29 wherein said identifying is carried out in a confined
region proximate to the active site.
33. A method according to claim 32 wherein said identifying is carried out in an optical
waveguide, preferably wherein the waveguide enhances said detecting.
34. A method according to claim 32 wherein nucleotides or nucleotide analogs that are
not polymerized at the active site move into and out of the confined region.
35. A method according to claim 29 wherein said identifying is carried out by electromagnetic
field enhancement with electromagnetic radiation being enhanced proximate to an object
with a radius of curvature to enhance the electromagnetic field at the active site.
36. A method according to claim 29 wherein said identifying is carried out by near-field
illumination of cavities in which the primed target nucleic acid molecule is positioned.
37. A method according to claim 29 wherein said identifying is carried out with optical
fibers proximate to the active site.
38. A method according to claim 29 wherein said identifying and said reducing background
is carried out by time gated delay of photon detection.
39. A method according to any preceding claim wherein the nucleotides or nucleotide analogs
comprise labels attached to the 5' termini of the nucleotides or analogs, preferably
wherein said identifying is effected by detecting labels attached to the nucleotides
or analogs.
40. The method of claim 34, wherein the confined region is fluidly connected to a plurality
of channels to direct different nucleotides or nucleotide analogs to the confined
region and a discharge channel to permit materials to be removed from the confined
region.